The Borneo Post

Bangladesh court doubles jail term for imprisoned opposition leader Khaleda

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DHAKA: A Bangladesh court yesterday doubled a jail term for imprisoned opposition leader Khaleda Zia from five to 10 years for what her supporters say are trumped-up corruption charges.

The decision came a day after Zia, arch-rival of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, was handed a separate seven-year term for other graft charges.

The prosecutio­n told AFP that Zia, 73, will serve the sentences concurrent­ly. Her lawyers said the former prime minister would appeal the latest ruling in Bangladesh’s highest court.

The Bangladesh Nationalis­t Party ( BNP), which Zia has led from Dhaka Central Jail since being incarcerat­ed in February, protested against the decision and vowed nationwide demonstrat­ions later yesterday.

The February corruption verdict triggered clashes between police and thousands of BNP loyalists.

The prosecutio­n had demanded Zia serve more t ime for embezzling orphanage money — an appeal a higher court granted yesterday.

“The high court has upheld the lower court verdict and raised the jail sentence from original five years to 10 years,” anti- corruption commission prosecutor Khurshid A Khan told AFP.

The high court has upheld the lower court verdict and raised the jail sentence from original five years to 10 years. Khurshid A Khan, anti-corruption commission prosecutor

Zia has always denied the charges, and many others she faces, saying she is being pursued in court to prevent her challengin­g Hasina in a general election slated for December.

Zia boycotted the 2014 general election which Hasina won, sparking violence across the Muslim- majority democracy of 160 million.

The latest court ruling deals a crushing blow to the BNP and its embattled leader, who is running out of time to appeal the courts to let her run.

“She cannot contest the elections unless the conviction is set aside by a higher court,” Bangladesh’s Attorney- General Mahbubey Alam told AFP.

Her lawyer, Sanaullah Mia, said Zia questioned whether her appeal would get a fair hearing in the Supreme Court.

“She had already expressed fear that she would not receive justice, and then this happens. There is no justice,” he said.

This latest court ruling comes as the independen­ce of Bangladesh’s judiciary is under question.

In a recently published memoir, a former chief justice alleged he was forced into exile last year after disagreein­g with Bangladesh’s powerful intelligen­ce services over a case.

Another judge, who also lives in exi le in Malaysia, made similar remarks in a television interview, a l leging he was threatened to hand down a guilty verdict against Zia’s son Tarique Rahman.

Rahman was jailed for li fe in absentia this month over a 2004 grenade attack on a Hasina political rally.

He lives in exile in London. — AFP

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